After 16 days and 80 productions, festival wraps up with awards in 11 categories

My Dad’s Blind: Anna Sheils-McNamee’s play was named best production at Dublin Fringe Festival

The marathon Dublin Fringe Festival – 80 productions and 554 performances over 16 days – ended on Sunday night with the announcement of this year’s fringe-award winners, in 11 categories.

They were given to “celebrate the hard work and ambition of more than 670 artists who created breathtaking, rule-breaking, legend-making moments at our 24th edition,” said Ruth McGowan, whose first festival as artistic director was generally reckoned to have been a good one, hitting some very high notes.

Best design, an award that encompassed outstanding lighting, sound, scenic, projection, costume or overall design, went to Infinity, by Eoghan Carrick and Nessa Matthews. The other nominees were After, by Liv O’Donoghue; Assisted Solo; Fragmentsby Jessie Keenan; My Dad’s Blind; and Owing to the Failure Of, by Zoë Comyns.

The two best performers – formerly best male and female, but broadened to include all gender identification – were Fionn Foley, for Brendan Galileo for Europe, and Zoe Ní Riordáin, for Everything I Do. Other shortlisted performers were Bláithín MacGabhann, for Lex Talionis; Damola Mac Diarmada, for Black Jam: Cure; Felispeaks, for Boy Child; Kate Kennedy for The Cat’s Mother ; Magali Caillet, for Assisted Solo; Nessa Matthews, for Infiniy; Pom Boyd, for Shame; and Shane Connolly, for Oneday.

The best-ensemble winner was Dreamgun Film Reads, for The Fringe Binge. Also shortlisted were Black Jam: Cure, Fable, Lex Talionis and The Lightkeepers’ Last Stand.

The judges’-choice award recognises a project, contributor or experience “just too good to pass by unheralded”, in two subcategories.

Brendan Galileo for Europe: Fionn Foley was named one of two best performers at Dublin Fringe Festival
Everything I Do: Zoe Ní Riordáin was named the other best performer at Dublin Fringe Festival

The first, zeitgeist, for shows with the finger on the pulse of social change, had two winners: Black Jam: Cure, by Fried Plantains Collective; and The Fianna Fellatio Party Launch, by Glitter Hole. The other nominees were Astronaut, by Joe Wright; Cock, Cock… Who’s There?by Samira Elogoz; Lex Talionis, by Wandering Star; and The Lightkeepers’ Last Stand, by Loosysmokes.

The second judges’-choice category is for best duo, which was won by Caged. The other shortlisted duo pieces were Cikada, by Ali and Henrik; My Dad’s Blind; Summertime, by Slip and Sync; and Witches & Dogs, by Erin McGathy and Ben Seeder.

The Fishamble new-writing award, for the best play by a new or emerging Irish (or Ireland-based) playwright premiered at the festival, went to The Cat’s Mother, by Erica Murray. The award includes dramaturgical support. Also shortlisted were Beat, by Fionntán Larney and Dominic O’Brien; For Saoirse, from Colm Keegan, presented by Axis, Ballymun; and Viva Voce, by Lauren-Shannon Jones.

The Next Stage wild-card award, a bursary for an artist to participate in the artist-development programme by Dublin Theatre Festival and Theatre Forum, went to Shanna May Breen for The Sound of Phoenix.

The Bewley’s Cafe Theatre little-gem award, for the most exciting show less than an hour long, went to Brendan Galileo for Europe. It will get a two-week run at Bewley’s Cafe Theatre, with €2,000 towards remounting the production. Also shortlisted were Appropriate, by Sarah-Jane Scott; Ireland’s Call, by John Connors; Lex Talionis; and Making Sense by Áine Gallagher.

The spirit of wit: Moira Brady Averill award, for “an artist willing to take risks and whose work defies categorisation with bold and unconventional material”, was won by Reckless Ross from Spit. The others on the shortlist were Billy, by Sarah Gordon and Alice Malseed; Dreamgun Film Reads; Drowning; Sweet Sensations, by Teri FitzGerald; and Witches & Dogs.

Judges for this year’s awards were the actor and singer Megan Riordan – who also chaired deliberations – the writer and comedian Alison Spittle, the journalist and writer Amy O’Connor, the actor, writer and director Aonghus Óg McAnally, the actor and Brazen Tales artistic director Camille Lucy Ross, Claire O’Reilly of Malaprop Theatre, Colm Carney of the Lir Academy of Dramatic Art, Diego Fasciati of Irish National Opera, Dylan Roche of Boys and Girls, Emma Matthews of Trinity College Dublin central societies committee and First Fortnight, the actor and writer John Doran, the performance poet Kalle Ryan, the architect, artist and lecturer Rae Moore, and the visual artist and designer Sharon Greene.